Facebook calls for government regulation

In an op-ed published in the Washington Post, Facebook's chief says the responsibility for monitoring harmful content is too great for firms alone.

The open letter, which will also be published in some European newspapers, comes as the social network faces questions over its role in the Cambridge Analytica scandal around data misuse during election campaigns.

The site has also been criticised for failing to stop the spread of footage of the Christchurch killings, in which 50 Muslims died as they prayed.

However, the site earlier announced that it was considering introducing restrictions on live-streaming in the wake of the Christchurch attacks.

On Friday it also started labelling political ads appearing on Facebook in EU countries, showing who the advertiser is, how much they paid and who they've targeted.

Original article
Author: Bbc News

Breaking news, sport, TV, radio and a whole lot more. The BBC informs, educates and entertains - wherever you are, whatever your age.

Bbc News has recently written 6 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern calls Facebook's new policy a "good first step"". (May 15, 2019)
  2. "Sheryl Sandberg promises to explore limits on who can live-stream video, following the NZ attacks". (March 30, 2019)
  3. "The US Department of Housing and Urban Development says Facebook limits who can see house adverts". (March 28, 2019)
  4. "The website Down Detector reports more than 9,000 people have complained that Facebook is down". (April 14, 2019)
  5. "The network accused InfoWars' Alex Jones and the Nation of Islam's Louis Farrakhan of hate speech". (May 2, 2019)
  6. "The social network was grabbing email contacts of some new users for almost three years, it says". (April 18, 2019)
Posted on  , ,